How to Move WordPress to a New Domain Without Affecting SEO

Every so often webmasters get the urge to move their WordPress site to a new domain. Whether it’s because the domain they’ve had their heart set on for ages is finally available or because the old domain name didn’t fully capture your site’s intended essence.

As online entrepreneurs, you’re probably familiar with the basic techy stuff but moving your site to a new domain is something you reckon only a developer ought to do. After all, there are some tasks you can’t copy-paste your way out of (I know you tried!).

Moving your site to another domain doesn’t necessarily have to be something you need to hire a developer for. In this article, I’ll walk you through a simple tutorial on moving your WordPress site to a new domain without affecting SEO – the non-techy way.

Let’s get some basics out of the way before we begin.

Why Move Your Site to a New Domain?

There are a few basic reasons why online entrepreneurs are faced with the challenge of moving their site to a new domain in the first place. Some of these are positive causes while others are negative.

Positive Reasons to Move Your Site

Better Domain Name: One of the absolute best reasons you could have for moving your site to a new domain is that the domain name you’ve been waiting ages for is finally available. It’s available and all yours for the taking. An authoritative domain name can have a lasting, positive effect on helping you acquire traffic goals and page views. However, if the new domain name isn’t likely to boost traffic (or help in any other way), then making the switch won’t be fruitful for your business growth.

Company Acquisition: Another popular reason for moving your site to a new domain is the acquisition of a company. If your company acquires another company, it could most certainly mean that it’s time to register a new domain name. Since it’s an acquisition, you’d be keeping your content in place. According to Hover, PayPal was developed after x.com, an Internet financial services company, acquired Confinity in 2000.

Negative Reasons to Move Your Site

Re-branding Required: Entrepreneurs often find that as their business grows it diverts from the intended goals. Whether it’s the outcome of a brilliant idea or it just happened on its own, if this new diversion is positive (financially speaking) it could mean that there’s some serious re-branding required. You’ll want new everything for your new idea – new name, new domain, new logo.

Spam Penalties: Sometimes situations take for the worse due to negligence and Google slams your site down with a horde of spam penalties. Violating Google’s guidelines is more common than you might think and recovering from its after effects can take ages. Website owners with little traffic often choose to move their site to a new domain in such scenarios.

Regardless of which reason yours is most coherent with, the outcome remains unchanged: You have to move your site. Before we delve head first into the tutorial, let’s get some basic housekeeping out of the way.

Basic Housekeeping

Before we move on to the tutorial, it’s very important that you create a full backup of your WordPress site. This preliminary step falls under best practices of site management and serves a dual purpose – your site will remain safe in case you encounter an error and you’ll have the content you need to move already downloaded (which you’d have had to do either way).

Creating a backup means that you’ll be downloading your entire site’s content from its respective hosting server(s). When I say all of your content, this means backing up two parts of your WordPress website:

The Files: The static files create your WordPress site’s skeleton – core WordPress files, theme files, etc. If you don’t back up the static files you’ll have to install a new theme and configure your new site’s settings from scratch.

The Databases: Your entire site’s content (posts, pages, comments, media files) and data are stored into databases. Backing up the databases is vital if you want to save all of the content on your site.

There are three ways to create a backup of your WordPress site:

Use a plugin: When it comes to WordPress, there’s a plugin for everything and creating backups is no exception to this rule. Backup Buddy and VaultPress are premium plugins that’ll create complete backups of your WordPress site in just a few clicks. Both offer great value for money and come with support from WordPress experts. But if you’d prefer a free solution then BackWPup will get the job done.

Use the cPanel: Most web hosting providers permit their customers to access the cPanel. Creating a WordPress backup from the Database Wizard is a simple three-step process that doesn’t require any coding effort on your part.

Create partial backups using cPanel.

The one thing you should remember is that it’s best to create a few partial backups as compared to one full backup because they’ll be easier to restore later on.

Do it manually: If neither of the above-mentioned options work for you for whatever reason, you can always do it by hand. To create a manual backup, you’ll need to install an FTP client like Filezilla or SmartFTP. For more info on manual backups, you can consult the WordPress Codex.

How to Move WordPress to a New Domain without Affecting SEO

In this section, we’ll walk through a detailed tutorial to help you move your WordPress site to a new domain without significantly affecting its SEO. If you haven’t already registered a new domain and set it up on a hosting server, follow Step 3 in our post How to Start a Blog From Scratch.

Step 1: Migrating Your WordPress Site to the New Domain

In this section, we’ll move the old WordPress site to the new domain using the Bluehost cPanel. Once you have your domain name registered and you’ve purchased a web hosting plan from Bluehost, you can log into the Bluehost cPanel to start uploading your old site to the new domain. We’ll break up this step into three parts so it’s easier to follow.

Create a New Database

One of the most common mistakes webmasters make is forgetting to create a new database when moving their WordPress site to a new domain.

From cPanel’s homepage, navigate to the databases tab.

Navigate to the databases tab from the homepage.

Create a new database. Write down the name of your new database in a safe location; you’ll need it later on.

Create a new database entry for your new site.

Click the Create Database button to proceed.

Create a user for the newly created database:

Choose a username for the new user.

Enter a password or use the Password Generator to create a strong password.

Write down your database user’s username and password in a safe location.

Create a user for your new database.

Click the Create A User

Under the Add a User to a Database section, assign the newly created user to the newly created database.

Assign the new user to the new database.

Click the Add button once you’re done.

Edit the wp-config.php File

Remember how we created backups of the old site’s static files in the Basic Housekeeping section? Open up the folder you saved them in and find your wp-config.php file which is generally located in the root directory.

Open the wp-config.php file in a text editor.

Find the following lines of text and replace them with:

The name of your new database.

Username of the user assigned to the new database.

Password of the user assigned to the new database.

https://gist.github.com/73ece9dac68f8edfdd2f

Save the wp-config.php file.

This step ensures that the system will look for your new site’s content in the new database that was specified.

Upload the Backed Up Files and Database Tables

In this step, we’ll restore the partial backups that we created of the old site onto the new site through the new site’s cPanel.

Log in to the new site’s cPanel.

Navigate to the files section from the cPanel homepage and click the Site Backup Pro icon.

Files > Site Backup Pro from the Bluehost cPanel

Restore the backups one by one:

Restore the home directory backup.

Restore the website files (static files) backup.

Restore the databases and tables backup.

Restore the partial backups individually.

Click the Upload button after each restore.

Remember that the backups could take a while to upload depending upon the size of your old website. Once you’re done with this, your new site should appear to be working properly. This is a great time to take out a few minutes and make sure the layout of your pages and posts is in order, correct any broken links, and check WordPress settings.

Step 2: Preserving SEO on the New Domain

By now you’ve successfully set up your old WordPress site on a new domain. The difficult part of the tutorial is over and all we have left to do is preserve our old site’s SEO as much as possible. In this section, we’ll cover three steps to optimally lessen the negative effect site migration can have on your search traffic.

Configuring Permanent Page Redirects

Setting up permanent 301 redirects to your old site will help your loyal viewership find your new domain. Now, you can simply publish a post or send a newsletter to everyone notifying them about the change but adding permanent page redirects helps preserve SEO and improve user experience by redirecting both readers and search engines to your new domain.

Log in to the cPanel of your old WordPress website.

Under the files section on the homepage, click on the File Manager icon.

Find your old site’s .htaccess file and add this code to it:

https://gist.github.com/ba139fac99b0ecdf3030

Informing Google About Your New Domain

By logging into Google Webmaster Tools, you can let Google know about your new site. Follow these steps to complete the procedure:

Verify your ownership of the website by navigating to the Alternate methods tab.

Select one of the listed options.

Verify your new domain with Google Webmaster Tools.

Click Verify.

Submitting a Sitemap to Google Webmaster Tools

Sitemaps will let you inform search engines about the pages on your new site that are available for crawling. They tell web crawlers where your new site’s pages are located and how they can reach them. Google Webmaster Tools allows you to submit your new site’s sitemap to Google.

Type the name of your sitemap file into the text box that appears on the next screen.

Enter the name of your new site’s sitemap.

Click the Submit Sitemap button.

By now, hoping everything went smoothly, you should have a fully functional WordPress site on the domain of your choice without suffering a significant loss in its SEO.

Wrapping It Up

We hope this guide helps you move your site to a new domain and serves as a manual for preserving its SEO to the max.

Moving a WordPress site to a new domain without affecting its SEO takes a ton of effort and time on the part of the webmaster. With some diligence and this step by step guide to help you, you can migrate your WordPress site without running into any unprecedented problems – even if you’re not particularly tech-savvy.

Were you able to successfully move your WordPress site to a new domain without affecting SEO? Did you encounter any errors or face trouble with any of the outlined steps? We’d love to hear about your experience so let us know all about it in the comments section below!

Thank you for visiting Colorlib and reading this article! We highly appreciate it! Now you might want to learn how to make a website using our free WordPress themes.

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